supplied by the pharmaceutical company, and a non-proprietary
(generic) name. It is usually available only from the company
that introduced it until the patent expires. After this, other com-
panies can manufacture and market the product, sometimes
under its generic name. At this time, pharmacists usually shop
around for the best buy. If a hospital doctor prescribes by propri-
etary name, the same drug produced by another company may
be substituted. This saves considerable amounts of money. The
attractions of generic prescribing in terms of minimizing costs
are therefore obvious, but there are counterarguments, the
strongest of which relates to the bioequivalence or otherwise of
the proprietary product with its generic competitors. The for-
mulation of a drug (i.e. excipients, etc.) differs between different
manufacturers’ products of the same drug, sometimes affecting
bioavailability. This is a particular concern with slow-release or
sustained-release preparations, or preparations to be adminis-
tered by different routes. Drug regulatory bodies have strict cri-
teria to assess whether such products can be licensed without
the full dataset that would be required for a completely new
product (i.e. one based on a new chemical entity).
It should be noted that the absolute bioavailability of two
preparations may be the same (i.e. the same AUC), but that the
kinetics may be very different (e.g. one may have a much
higher peak plasma concentration than the other, but a shorter
duration). The rate at which a drug enters the body determines
the onset of its pharmacological action, and also influences the
intensity and sometimes the duration of its action, and is
important in addition to the completeness of absorption.
Prescribers need to be confident that different preparations
(brand named or generic) are sufficiently similar for their sub-
stitution to be unlikely to lead to clinically important alter-
ations in therapeutic outcome. Regulatory authorities have
responded to this need by requiring companies who are seek-
ing to introduce generic equivalents to present evidence that
their product behaves similarly to the innovator product that
is already marketed. If evidence is presented that a new
generic product can be treated as therapeutically equivalent to
the current ‘market leader’, this is accepted as ‘bioequiva-
lence’. This does not imply that all possible pharmacokinetic
parameters are identical between the two products, but that
any such differences are unlikely to be clinically important.
It is impossible to give a universal answer to the generic vs.
proprietary issue. However, substitution of generic for brand-
name products seldom causes obvious problems, and excep-
tions (e.g. different formulations of the calcium antagonist
diltiazem, see Chapter 29) are easily flagged up in formularies.
PRODRUGS
One approach to improving absorption or distribution to a rel-
atively inaccessible tissue (e.g. brain) is to modify the drug
molecule chemically to form a compound that is better
absorbed and from which active drug is liberated after absorp-
tion. Such modified drugs are termed prodrugs (Figure 4.3).
Examples are shown in Table 4.1.
18 DRUG ABSORPTION AND ROUTES OF ADMINISTRATION
i.v.dosing
Oral dosing
[Drug] in plasma
100
10
1
Time→
Figure 4.2:Oral vs. intravenous dosing: plasma concentration–time
curves following administration of a drug i.v. or by mouth (oral).
Key points
- Drugs must cross phospholipid membranes to reach the
systemic circulation, unless they are administered
intravenously. This is determined by the lipid solubility of
the drug and the area of membrane available for
absorption, which is very large in the case of the ileum,
because of the villi and microvilli. Sometimes polar drugs
can be absorbed via specific transport processes (carriers). - Even if absorption is complete, not all of the dose may
reach the systemic circulation if the drug is metabolized
by the epithelium of the intestine, or transported
back into lumen of the intestine or metabolized in the
liver, which can extract drug from the portal blood
before it reaches the systemic circulation via the
hepatic vein. This is called presystemic (or ‘first-pass’)
metabolism. - ‘Bioavailability’ describes the completeness of
absorption into the systemic circulation. The amount of
drug absorbed is determined by measuring the plasma
concentration at intervals after dosing and integrating
by estimating the area under the plasma
concentration/time curve (AUC). This AUC is expressed as
a percentage of the AUC when the drug is administered
intravenously (100% absorption). Zero per cent
bioavailability implies that no drug enters the systemic
circulation, whereas 100% bioavailability means that all
of the dose is absorbed into the systemic circulation.
Bioavailability may vary not only between different
drugs and different pharmaceutical formulations of the
same drug, but also from one individual to another,
depending on factors such as dose, whether the dose
is taken on an empty stomach, and the presence of
gastro-intestinal disease, or other drugs. - The rate of absorption is also important (as well as the
completeness), and is expressed as the time to peak
plasma concentration (Tmax). Sometimes it is desirable
to formulate drugs in slow-release preparations to
permit once daily dosing and/or to avoid transient
adverse effects corresponding to peak plasma
concentrations. Substitution of one such preparation
for another may give rise to clinical problems unless the
preparations are ‘bioequivalent’. Regulatory authorities
therefore require evidence of bioequivalence before
licensing generic versions of existing products. - Prodrugs are metabolized to pharmacologically active
products. They provide an approach to improving
absorption and distribution.